BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to an access system in which the optical pickup of an optical-disc
reproducing apparatus makes access to a track on the disc, and particularly to an
access system suitable for the pickup to move at high speed, making high-speed access
to track without any vibration of a lens.
[0002] There is known an actuator having an object lens for an optical disc-reproducing
apparatus, the object lens is moved in the focus direction (optical- axis direction)
in order for the light beam to be focused on the disc and the object lens is moved
in the tracking direction (perpendicular to the optical axis) in order to follow a
track on the disc. For the drive of pickup in each direction is used the servo technology
which employs a feed-back circuit. For example, a tracking servo circuit is disclosed
in U.S.P. 4,525,823 titled "OPTICAL TRACKING SYSTEM". When the light spot is moved
to one of the discontinuous positions on a rotating disc, a pickup is moved in the
radius direction to make access to a different track under the condition in which
the tracking servo system is cut off, and therefore, the object lens which is free,
or movable on the pickup is vibrated in the track direction when the pickup is accelerated
or decelerated. When the pickup arrived at the target track position to be accessed,
the object lens is vibrated, resulting in poor pulling operation for tracking; that
is, it follows that the light beam passing through the object lens when the tracking
servo is again on, does not follow a certain track, takes a long time to follow or
takes a different time to follow each time.
[0003] In addition, since pulling operation is uncertainly made somewhere in the tracking
operation range of the lens, or since the pull operation is not always made at the
position where the optical axis of the pickup is coincident with the center of the
object lens held on the actuator of the pickup through the suspension, the amount
of movement of the pickup sometimes actually scatters.
[0004] In order to cope with the above problem, a position sensor is attached to a movable
portion of the actuator of the optical pickup so that the lens is controlled to be
locked by the servo technics during access (when the pickup is travelling), as is
disclosed in a digest of technical papers presented at the Topical Meeting on Optical
Data Storage Optical Society of America, April 18 - 20, 1984, Montery, California,
titled "A Fast Random Access Servo System Utilizing A Digital-Audio Optical Pickup"
by Scott Hamilton, Tony Lavendender and Larry Dillard, FC - B4 - 1, and "A Two Axis
Linear Servo Motor For Optical Recording" by Thomas E. Berg, FC - B2 - 1.
[0005] According to these citations, the actuator becomes very complicated in construction,
and since the weight of the movable portion increases, there is a possibility that
the basic performance of the actuator including the movable portion and a magnetic
circuit for moving the movable portion is deteriorated.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] It is an object of this invention to provide an access system which can remove the
vibration of the object lens in the tracking direction which occurs upon movement
of the pickup.
[0007] It is another object of this invention to provide an optical disc driving apparatus
which can prevent the vibration of the object lens mounted on the pickup by detecting
the position of the lens without addition of the position sensor to the actuator.
The number of additional circuits are desired to be as small as possible.
[0008] According to this invention, together with the access operation of the lens made
under the condition in which the tracking servo is cut off once, the light beam projected
on the optical detector, when moved due to the inertia of the lens and the actuator
having the lens mounted thereon, is detected and thereby the tracking servo system
is operated to actuate a servo for prevention of vibration of the object lens. The
optical detector is divided at least in connection with the information tracks into
sub-detectors which are arranged apart from the conjugate point relative to the image
of the disc track so that the displacement of the lens is detected by using the movement
of the beam associated with the displacement of the lens in the tracking direction
on the detector.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009]
Fig. lA shows a construction of the optical system of an embodiment of this invention.
Fig. 1B shows a light sensitive portion of an optical detector.
Figs. 2 and 3a to 3c show pits and beam spots on a disc.
Fig. 4 is a circuit block diagram.
Figs. 5a to 5d and 6a to 6d are waveform diagrams for signal waveforms detected and
calculated.
Figs. 7a to 7d, 8a to 8c, 9a to 9c, 10a to 10c, 11, 12, and 13a to 13d are diagrams
showing the relations among the position of the light beam spot, the light output
and the converted electrical signal waveform.
Figs. 14, 15a and 15b are block diagrams of other embodiments of this invention.
Figs. 16a to 16c are diagrams of electrical signal waveforms.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0010] Fig. lA shows a main part of one embodiment of an optical disc apparatus of the invention.
Referring to Fig. lA, the laser light emitted from a laser diode 1 is passed through
a half prism 2, a collimator lens 3 and an object lens 4, thereby focused on an information
track of an optical disc 5. The laser light reflected from this disc 5 is again passed
through the object lens 4, and the collimimator lens 3, reflected from the half prism
2 into a cylindrical lens 6 and then incident to an optical detector 7. The optical
detector 7 is formed of four sections 7a to 7d shown in Fig. lB. The focus-detected
signals from the four sections are added and subtracted by operators 8 to 10 shown
in Fig. 4, into (7a + 7c) - (7b + 7d).
[0011] If, now, the object lens 4 is displaced up to a position 4' in an arrow-40 direction,
the luminous flux is moved in an arrow-42 direction as indicated by a broken line
11' on the optical detector 7. Therefore, if the movement of a spot 11 of the luminous
flux on the optical detector 7 is detected as described later and if a servo- control
is actuated to decrease an amount of the movement, it is possible to suppress the
movement of the object lens 4 due to an external disturbance.
[0012] With reference to Figs. 2, 4 and 5a to 5d, a description will be made of the case
in which the beam spot crosses a track of the disc from the inside to the outside.
If the object lens 4 is in the normal position as indicated by a solid line in Fig.
lA, the beam spot 11 is at the center on the optical detector 7 as shown in Fig. lB
by the solid line. The intensity of a DISC DATA OUT signal 20 produced through summing
operational units 12, 13 and 14 is low when the beam spot is on one of the pits of
any track m as shown in Fig. 2 by a small circle but it is high when the beam spot
is at any position on the mirror between two pits, or between two adjacent tracks
(for example, between tracks k and j shown in Fig. 2). This signal 20 is processed
as main information (, or 7a + 7b + 7c + 7d). If the beam spot on the track i is moved
toward the outer track m after the completion of one read/write operation by a pickup
driven on the request of the access to the outer track m, it crosses a track on the
disc and thus the intensity of the signal 20 changes as shown by A
1 in Fig. 5a. The troughs of the curve A
1 correspond to pits and the crests thereof to the mirror area. A peak detecting circuit
17 shown in Fig. 4 includes a comparator which detects the crests and supplies a pulse
C
1 shown in Fig. 5c to a sample-and-hold circuit 16 having a switch function.
[0013] A subtracting operational unit, or a differential amplifier 15 supplies a signal
indicative of the difference ((a + b) - (c + d)) between the outputs of the summing
operational units 12 and 13 to the other input of the sample-and-hold circuit 16.
This signal is sampled at the high-level of the signal C
1 and the sampled B-input level just passed during the high-level interval of the signal
C
1 is held during the low-level interval thereof. This circuit 16 can be formed of a
combination of various sampling and holding circuits.
[0014] The change of the signal ((a + b) - (c + d)) will be described with reference to
Figs. 7a to 7d, 8a to 8c, 9a to 9c, 10a to 10c, 11 and 12. Optical detectors 7a' to
7d' shown in Figs. 7a to 7d each are of a quadrant shape different from the square-shaped
detectors 7a to 7d (Fig. 1B) but they produce outputs similar to those of the detectors
7a to 7d. If the beam spot is on the mirror area of the disc, the light intensity
on the detector is symmetrical with respect to a straight line 44 separating the sub-detectors
7a', 7b' and sub-detectors 7d', 7c' as shown on the right-hand side of Fig. 7d, and
therefore a + b = c + d. As a result, the signal ((a + b) - (c + d)) becomes zero
level as shown in Fig. 11 at the leftmost end. If the pits are moved right by the
disc rotation, a pit enters into the outer (, or upper) portion of the beam spot as
shown in Figs. 8a to 8c when the beam spot is moved outward (or upward). At this time,
the signal ((a + b) - (c + d)) is less than zero, or (a + b) - (c + d) < 0 as will
be clear from the light intensity distribution on the detector shown on the right-hand
side of Fig. 7a. That is, the signal ((a + b) - (c + d)) takes the negative waveform
as shown by 01 to ③in Fig. 11. If the pit goes out of the spot, the signal is again
returned to zero level. If the spot is further moved outward (, or upward) on the
disc, the next pit enters into the spot as the disc rotates. If the pit is on the
center axis of the spot along the tangential direction of the track as shown in Figs.
9a to 9c, the light intensity on the detector becomes symmetrical with respect to
the axis 44 as shown on the right hand side of Fig. 7b. The two dark areas on the
detector as indicated by hatched lines on the left-hand side of Fig. 7b are the image
of the pit on the disc as shown by hatched areas in Fig. 9b. The separation of the
image into the two dark portions is due to the diffraction phenomenon in the optical
system shown in Fig. lA. This diffraction phenomenon is described in the specification
of U.S.P. 4,006,293 titled "APPARATUS FOR READING A FLAT RECORD CARRIER WITH AN OPTICALLY
READABLE INFORMATION STRUCTURE". The signal ((a + b) - (c + d)) is substantially zero
level through the periods of ④, ⑤ and ⑥ shown in Figs. 9a to 9c. If the pit advances
further right, away from the beam spot, the light intensity distribution becomes symmetrical
as shown on the right-hand side of Fig. 7d and hence the signal ((a + b) - (c + d))
becomes zero level. If the beam spot is moved outward, the next pit appears on the
lower area of the beam spot as shown in Figs. 10a to lOc. At this time, the dark pit
image appears on the sub-detectors 7d' and 7c' of the detectors 7a' to 7d' as shown
in Fig. 7c and hence the signal (a + b) - (c + d) is larger than zero, or (a + b)
- (c + d) > 0. That is, the positive-wave signal as shown in
Fig. 11 by ⑦, ⑧ and ⑨is supplied to the input B of the sample-and-hold means 16. If
the pit is rotated right and the beam spot is moved outward so that the pit goes out
of the range of the beam spot, this signal is again zero level. Fig. 5b also shows
the same waveform of the signal Bl as shown in Fig. 11, for the purpose of comparing
it with the signal Al shown in Fig. 5a.
[0015] As described above, when the object lens 4 is in the normal position, the output
from the differential amplifier 15 is substantially zero as far as the beam spot is
in the mirror area between the pits, or between the tracks. The circuit 16 is used
to make this substantially zero voltage level be associated with the voltage levels
produced during the periods ① to ③, ④to ⑥, and ⑦ to ⑨ due to the pit lying on the
beam spot. The high-frequency noise from the output of the circuit 16 is removed by
a low-pass filter 18, which then produces an output D of stationary zero level as
shown in Fig. 5d.
[0016] A description will be made of the case in which the object lens 4 is shifted up to
position 4' in the arrow-40 direction of Fig. lA. When the object lens is shifted
up to position 4', the light beam path to the detector 7 is deviated as shown by a
broken line 6b and thus the beam spot is shifted in the arrow-42 direction as shown
by the broken line in Fig. 1B. Therefore, the light intensity distribution on the
detector 7 changes as shown on the right-hand side of Figs. 13a to 13d. Accordingly,
the levels of the signals ((a + b) - (c + d)) in all the cases are generally shifted,
or make an offset in the positive direction. This offset will be changed with a period
corresponding to the mechanical natural vibration frequency of the optical pickup
system provided with the lens 4. A distance 48 shown by the opposite arrows in Fig.
6b is the offset included in the output which the differential amplifier 15 produces
in accordance with the deviation of the beam spot on the detectors 7a' to 7d shown
in Figs. 13a to 13d. The change of signal B2 due to the existence of pit as well as
the signal Bl is removed by the sample-and-hold circuit. In other words, the signal
B2 from the differential amplifier is sampled and held by the sample-and-hold circuit
in response to the signal C
2 resulting from the reflection of the beam spot from the mirror area, of the sum signal
from the optical detector, and thereby the signal component of the input signal to
the sample-and-hold circuit, which component results from the reflection of the beam
spot from the pit, can be removed. This signal from the sample-and-hold circuit has
an offset or a DC component (which changes in synchronism with the low vibration frequency
of the lens 4) due to the shifting of the object lens.
[0017] Therefore, the cut-off frequency of the low-pass filter 18 is selected to be higher
than the natural vibration frequency of the lens 4.
[0018] A switch 22 is provided to switch this offset to the tracking servo circuit system
of the object lens. During the read/write period in which data is read from or written
in the disc, the movable contact of the switch 22 is connected to the contact 49,
to connect the tracking servo circuit 18 to an objective drive circuit 23. When a
signal indicative of the period in which the pickup with the object lens 4 is travelled,
or accessed to a desired track is supplied from the access timing circuit 25 to the
switch 22, the movable contact is connected to the contact 50, so that a drive output
for amplifying the offset signal according to the shift of the lens and restoring
the lens to the normal position is supplied from an access servo circuit 21 to the
objective drive circuit 23, thus completing a access servo circuit to lock the objective.
[0019] Adding amplifiers 8 and 9 supply two signals (a + b) and (c + d), or the sums of
diagonal quadrant detector outputs, to a differential amplifier 10. The differential
amplifier 10 produces a signal (a + c) - (b + d) indicative of the difference between
the sums and supplies it to a focus servo circuit (not shown) as a focus detected
signal.
[0020] The invention of this application relates to the detection of the displacement of
the objective on the optical pickup in the tracking control direction across a number
of successive tracks so as to access to a desired track. This invention is also useful
in the optical disc drive unit which does not make focus control except tracking control.
Fig. 14 shows another embodiment of this invention which has a summing operational
unit 14' and differential amplifier 15' connected to dual detector 7a", 7c". The output
signals from both detectors are the same as those from the circuits 12 and 13 in Fig.
4.
[0021] Fig. 15a shows still another embodiment of this invention. In this embodiment, two
detectors are used shaped in a semi-circle and supply outputs of (a + b) and (c +
d) to summing and differential amplifiers 14" and 15". The output from the circuit
14" changes in the low-level side direction since a single pit passes through the
spot region as indicated by a broken line in Fig. 16a. If the spot lies in the mirror
area between tracks, the output signal is of the waveform shown by 52 in Fig. 16a
since there is no change toward low level. That is, the change shown by the broken
line corresponds to the passage of one pit, and the change of signal shown by the
solid line corresponds to the passage of one track. How many pit change waveforms
there are during one-track change period is dependent on the ratio of the disc revolution
rate to the travel speed of the beam spot. The output from the adder 14" (, or a +
b + c + d) is supplied to a mirror envelope detecting circuit 30 for detecting the
envelope of the high-level voltage of the signal, or the voltage at the mirror-side
position, to an envelope detecting circuit 31 for detecting the output at the lower-side
of signal change, or at pit side which cannot follow the superimposition of signals
due to the passage of track, and to a bottom-side envelope detecting circuit 32 for
detecting the output at the lower side of signal change, and following the superimposition
of signals due to the passage of track. These envelope detectors 30, 31 and 32 produce
outputs of waveforms E, F and H, respectively. The half outputs from the optical detector
7 are supplied to the differential amplifier 15" where they are subtracted, or (a
+ b) - (c + d) is produced. This subtracted output is further supplied to a low-pass
filter 34, which removes its high-frequency component and produces an output waveform
I. The output waveform I as illustrated is the result of the superimposition of a
repetitive waveform caused at the time of crossing each track, on the component sloped
up to the right due to the movement of the lens in the negative direction because
the lens is moving. That is, it is necessary to remove the high-frequency component
J due to the movement of the lens, from the output I by the low-pass filter 36. In
this embodiment, the output wave I is sampled only when the beam spot is at the center
between tracks, or on the guard track (mirror area) as indicated by one-dot chain
line. This is because when the beam spot is on the guard track, the beam intensity
is uniform on the optical detector 7. To make this sampling operation, the outputs
E and F are divided by resistors R
1 and R
2, respectively and then added into a level G, which is compared with the output H
by a comparator 33. The output waveform I is sampled at the time of the coincidence
output from this comparator (, or at the end of the period, H > G). The output from
the sampling circuit 35 is supplied to a low-pass filter 36, which then produces a
waveform D'. The period ACC shown in Fig. 16b is the period in which the object lens
is moving in the direction in which the pickup moves, or the period in which acceleration
is made. The output D' indicates the displacement of the lens. If the output D' is
amplified by an access servo circuit and supplied to the lens, completing a feedback
loop, the lens movement can be suppressed.
[0022] Fig. 15b shows still another embodiment, in which resistors R
1 and R
3 are connected between the output of the mirror side envelope detecting circuit and
ground so as to provide a divided level G.
[0023] While each of the embodiments has been mentioned for the compact disc (CD) drive
for music, it can be applied to the access servo circuit for computer-purpose optical
disc. The computer-purpose optical disc is different from a spiral-track disc in that
the tracks are formed separated from each other. In either disc, the movement of the
optical pickup to the target track can be made by counting the number of times the
waveform H changes as shown in Fig. 16a, that is, the number of tracks which the pickup
passes across.
[0024] Also, each of the embodiment can be applied to the access servo circuit of video
disc player, or to the other optical disc drive or CD ROM.
1. An optical disc apparatus arranged so that the beam from a laser light source (1)
is focused by an object lens (4), and irradiated on an optical recording medium (5)
from which the reflected beam is irradiated on an optical detector (7) from which
a signal on the medium is reproduced, wherein said optical detector comprises:
two adjacent photoelectric transducers (7a, 7b ; 7c, 7d);
means (15) for making the difference between the detected outputs from said transducers;
means for detecting the position of said object lens in the direction perpendicular
to said tracks in cooperation with said output difference producing means (15); and
a feedback loop arranged so that when the tracking servo is not properly operated
at the time of access, or by external disturbance, said object lens is in the optical
axis center of the optical system of the optical disc apparatus.
2. An optical disc apparatus according to Claim 1, wherein the difference between
said detected outputs from said optoelectric transducers is sampled only at the position
between the pits of said optical recording medium, or only at the mirror area.
3. An optical disc apparatus according to Claim 1, wherein said object lens is provided
with a lens drive by which said object lens can be moved in the focus and tracking
directions.
4. An optical disc apparatus according to Claim 2, wherein said difference from said
difference making means is sampled only at the position on a guard track between adjacent
tracks of said optical recording medium.
5. An optical disc drive comprising:
(a) divided optical detectors (7) which are sensitive to a light beam that is used
to optically read or write data from or on an optical disc through an object lens;
(b) operational amplifiers (12 to 15, 14', 15') for making the sum and difference
of the outputs from said divided optical detectors;
(c) means (16, 17, 18, 30 to 35) for supplying a signal corresponding to the shift
of said object lens during access to a track in accordance with the outputs of said
operational amplifiers; and
(d) feedback servo loop means (21, 22, 25, 50) connected to the outputs of said signal
supplying means to make said object lens positioned in the optical axis center of
the optical system of the optical disc apparatus.
6. An optical disc drive according to Claim 5, wherein said detectors are formed of
two sub-detectors each of which generates an electrical signal corresponding to the
amount of light irradiated thereon, said operational amplifiers produce the sum and
difference of said electrical signals, respectively, and said shift signal means (16,
17, 18) having sample-and-hold means (16, 17) for sampling and holding the difference
signal from said operational amplifiers in response to the timing signal indicative
of the sum signal, and supplying the held difference signal to said access servo circuit,
and said disc drive further comprising:
access timing means (25) for supplying a signal indicative of the read/write mode
in which disc data is read or written through said object lens and a signal indicative
of the access mode in which said object lens is shifted to a desired track;
a tracking servo circuit (18) for driving said object lens so that in the read/write
mode, the light beam passing through said object lens is irradiated on a desired track;
and
an access servo circuit (21) for driving said object lens so that in the access mode,
said object lens is located at a predetermined position, and switch means
(22) connected to said tracking servo circuit and said access servo circuit so that
the output from one of said circuits is supplied through said switch means to an object
lens drive (23) in response to the mode signals from said access timing means.
7. An optical disc apparatus according to Claim 3, wherein said sample-and-hold means
(16, 17) comprises:
peak detecting means (17) for detecting the time zone in which said sum signal has
peaks, and supplying a timing signal indicative of the time zone; and
a sample-and-hold circuit responsive to said difference signal and said timing signal
to produce in the time zone of the peaks and hold the last timing signal of each of
said peak time zones.
8. An optical disc drive according to Claim 5, wherein said shift signal means (16
to 18, 30 to 35) includes:
means responsive to said sum signal to produce a timing signal for the peaks corresponding
to the irradiation of light beam on the mirror area between the tracks;
means (35) responsive to said difference signal to hold each value of said timing
signal; and
an accessing servo circuit (21) responsive to the output from said hold means to hold
said object lens in the normal position.
9. An optical disc drive according to Claim 8, wherein said peak timing means has
a circuit for smoothing the signal level side wave corresponding to the dark pit of
said sum signal by the frequency characteristic (H) near the track pass frequency
upon access.
10. An optical disc drive according to Claim 5, wherein said optical detectors are
formed of 4 sub-detectors having two perpendicular boundary lines and which generate
electrical signals corresponding to the amounts of light beam irradiated thereon through
said object lens, and said operational amplifiers are formed of operational amplifiers
(8, 9) for making the sums of the outputs of two diagonal pairs (a:c ; b:d) of said
4 sub-detectors, and a differential amplifier (10) for making the difference (a +
c) - (b + d) between the outputs of said two operational amplifiers.
11. An optical disc drive according to Claim 5, wherein said optical system is arranged
so that when said object lens is moved to cross disc tracks, the light beam spot on
said optical detectors is moved in the direction perpendicular to the boundary line
of said optical detectors.